GAIB
  • Introduction
  • Problem
  • Solution
  • Importance to the Market
  • Size of the Opportunity
  • Protocol Mechanics
  • How AID works
    • What is AID
    • How to Acquire AID
    • What Can You Do with AID
    • AID <--> sAID
    • What Can You Do with sAID
    • How to Dispose of AID
  • How GPUs are Tokenized
    • Deal Flow Structure
    • Parties & Agreements
    • Risk Management & Enhancements
    • Default & Enforcement
    • Tokenization Criteria & Process
    • GAIB's Credit Committee
      • Credit Risk Analysis Criteria
  • AID Alpha
    • FAQ
  • Audits
  • Legal
    • Terms of Use
    • Privacy Policy
    • Cookies Policy
    • Disclaimers and Risk Disclosures
    • Pilot Program Disclaimer
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On this page
  • Staking
  • Lending and Borrowing
  • Trading
  • Liquidity Provisioning
  1. How AID works

What Can You Do with AID

Staking

Users can stake AID to receive sAID, a liquid, yield-bearing token representing their staked positions. Yield accrues via a floating exchange rate between sAID and AID, allowing stakers to benefit from the growth in the underlying asset.

Lending and Borrowing

GAIB will integrate with major lending protocols to let users deposit AID into lending pools and earn additional returns. Borrowing will also be possible, enabling users to lock major cryptocurrencies as collateral and borrow AID against them.

Trading

A variety of trading pairs will be introduced, pairing AID with other major currencies. By positioning AID as a base currency, GAIB aims to facilitate seamless swaps and easy management of trading positions.

Liquidity Provisioning

GAIB incentivizes users to supply AID liquidity in AMM pools. Liquidity providers earn fees and receive GAIB token incentives, making this an attractive way to support the ecosystem and generate income.

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Last updated 1 month ago